Selling a second home or BTL property in the UK? You pay CGT at 18% or 24% on the gain, after the £3,000 annual exemption. Plus the 60-day reporting rule. Worked examples
Quick reference for UK income tax 2025/26: rates and bands for England/Wales/NI and Scotland, plus Personal Allowance, NI thresholds, dividend rates, savings allowance and student loan thresholds
Buying a second home or buy-to-let in England or NI? You pay a 5% SDLT surcharge on top of standard rates (raised from 3% in October 2024). Worked examples on £200k-£500k properties
If you can't pay your UK Self Assessment bill on time, HMRC's Time to Pay scheme spreads it over 6-12 monthly instalments. Here's how to set one up, the 7.5% interest rate, and what protects you from penalties
For UK self-employed in 2025/26, sole trader is simpler but limited company saves tax above ~£35-40k of profit. Worked comparison at £30k, £50k, £80k profit — plus IR35 and admin trade-offs
On a £40,000 UK salary in 2025/26 you take home £32,290 net (£2,691/month). Income tax £5,486, NI £2,194. Full breakdown with pension and student loan variants
If you're UK tax-resident, you typically pay UK tax on worldwide income. Here's how foreign salary, dividends, rental, US 401(k), pensions and crypto are taxed in the UK, with double tax relief
On a £100,000 UK salary you take home £67,803 net (£5,650/month). But every pound earned above £100k is hit by the 60% effective tax rate due to the personal allowance taper. Full breakdown
UK CGT on shares is 18% (basic rate band) or 24% (higher rate band) after the £3,000 annual exemption. Here's how Section 104 pooling works, when to report, and how 'Bed and ISA' avoids tax
The UK Personal Savings Allowance is £1,000 for basic-rate taxpayers, £500 for higher-rate, £0 for additional-rate. Above PSA, savings interest is taxable. Here's how it works and what to do above it
If HMRC overcharged you via PAYE (wrong tax code, emergency tax, mid-year job change), you can claim back overpaid tax through P800, R40 or your Personal Tax Account. Here's exactly how
On Universal Credit, every £1 you earn above your work allowance reduces UC by 55p (the taper rate). Here's how the work allowance, taper rate and 2025/26 rates actually work, with worked examples